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Hehehe, that falconeri is doing better and putting out larger leaves than the mother plant.

I'm keeping my eye on the cuneifolia. I know what you mean. It seemed a tad rounded for some reason. The growth rate is starting to pick up, otherwise i'm keeping a distance and just snapping photos every so often.

Leave em alone if they're growing is a good plan. I question the ID (and I may very well be wrong!) due to the nature of the petiole, which is distinct from the lamina. D. cuneifolia has almost no petiole at all. These look rather like D. aliciae to me eye, but really only time will tell. I hope they prove to be D. cuneifolia. We certainly need to get this species around more than it is.

I can see what Tamlin means, but I would wait and see what develops. The one time I raised this species from seed, when they were a little older the looked like D. aliciae leaves cut in half, with the petiole remobved and the rest scrunched in. That was explained really badly. They were very wide-leaved.